Chrome browser updated with battery-saving feature

Google has released a Chrome browser update with a video decoding enhancement that the company claims will help users save battery life.

By
Juan Carlos Perez
| Nov 07, 2012

| IDG News Service

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Google has released a Chrome browser update with a video decoding enhancement that the company claims will help users save battery life.

The feature, available for Chrome on Windows, cuts power consumption by executing video decoding on graphics processing units instead of on computers' CPUs, Google said. This is because dedicated graphics chips require much less power than computers' CPUs, resulting in a 25% increase in battery life in Google tests.

"Now Chrome users on Windows will experience longer battery life so they don't get cut off while watching their favourite YouTube video on repeat," said Ami Fischman, a Google software engineer.

This Chrome update - version 23 - also gives users an option to send a "do not track" request to websites and online services, although Google warned that this feature's effectiveness depends on how the sites and services field these requests.

"Google is working with others on a common way to respond to these requests in the future," Fischman said.

Chrome 23 also consolidates in an icon next to the URL a website's permission settings for things like geolocation identification, pop up messages and camera-microphone access.

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"Now, simply click on the page/lock icon next to a website's address in the omnibox to see a list of permissions and tweak them as you wish," Fischman said.

Security fixes include one that is not in the Chrome browser per se, but rather in the way MacOS defends against wild writes in compromised graphics drivers. Google paid $1,000 to the person who reported this bug, rated High, the second-highest rating behind Critical.

Google fixed 13 other security vulnerabilities, including five rated High and seven rated Medium, including one for which it paid a reward of $3,500.